Jashaun Sadler, right, and his twin children, Malik, left, and Jazlin center, hold signs and listen to speakers during a Black Lives Matter protest Sunday that began in Times Square.
Photo Credit: AP / Seth Wenig

Several hundred protesters, predominantly young people wearing black clothing, marched Sunday from Times Square to Union Square, where they paid tribute to African-American lives lost in police-involved violence.

The demonstration came on the fourth consecutive day of nationwide protests linked to the Black Lives Matter movement, including a peaceful event Thursday night in Dallas that was disrupted by a gunman who shot five police officers to death and wounded seven others, including two civilians.

The Manhattan protest was without confrontation with NYPD officers, who monitored from the perimeter in Union Square.

Speakers took turns using a megaphone to express their thoughts, pay respects to the victims — including Philando Castile and Alton Sterling, shot dead last week, respectively, in Minnesota and Louisiana — and call for peace and unity.

Many said they were weary of a seemingly endless cycle of violence.

“I’m here today because I’m tired of what’s going on. I’m tired of seeing my brothers die,” said Kevin Rijo, 18, a student living in East New York, Brooklyn.

Daniel Loomis, 36, of Ditmas Park, Brooklyn, said the “sense of futility” was hard to deal with, but protesting is one thing he could do.